Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Wasn't trying to tar all bankers with the same brush and well aware that many of the shenanigans weren't against the law even if they were, to those outside looking in, a tad shady (moving money around is one thing, some of the gambling in the futures markets seems reckless and only concerned with making money for funds without any consideration of the real world implications). I was more referring that at the point where the banks were bailed out, there was a lot of talk about limiting bonuses until the banks had paid back the taxpayer and yet, the country is still making cuts while there are some large bonuses around even in those banks bailed out. Now, while again that's legal so there's not much we can do about it, it doesn't entirely feel right.


Still... it's an entirely different conversation to what the thread is about. Two wrongs don't make a right so just because there are perceived injustices out there, it doesn't mean we shouldn't throw the book at those who took part in last week's lootings.

OK, I'll play devils advocate here.


What we saw last week was the complete break down of law and order. People looting felt the law was beyond them - why else would they have brazenly broke into shops knowing that press and cctv cameras were focussed on them. This is the law trying to reassert its authority. Not only is the crime being taken into account, but the circumstances around the crime - i.e. if you were out there, then your crime is considered as part of the general violence.


There are going to be anomalies - the woman getting 5 months for receiving the looted shorts being one - but I hope the appeals process will right those wrongs.


I can see people's arguments, but I am really, really struggling to have any sympathy to any punishment dealt to anyone who had an involvement with the looting.

" And the Judiciary do take note of guidance on sentencing, so if you have a Government line that says 'we will get you and there will be no leniancy', then some Judges will interpret that to mean maximun sentencing and no bail. "


Sentencing guidelines are not issued by the govt.


"Except that how the judiciary are seeing it is that even those who 'just' looted opportunistically are responsible 'art and part' for the bigger situation"


Public order offences (affray, violent disorder etc.) explicitly make each individual responsible in law for all the consequences of the associated behaviour, and I can't see any reason not to extend the logic to the 'passing looter'.


There is no conspiracy. Sentences are not, as far as I can see, generally out of step with what you would expect for offences committed in the context of serious widespread disorder, even if there is the odd particularly harsh one. Linking it to MPs and/or bankers is just nonsense.

Someone posted this up on the Guardian comment site, which I thought was interesting:


"I'm not a lawyer but have had it explained by a lawyer and I understand this to be the case: in riots, anyone convicted gets an automatically higher sentence because, in addition to the crime they were convicted for, they have ridden on the back of someone else's violence. Basically, a looter uses the violent crowd as a weapon (intimidation, distraction, actual physical violence) the same way that a getaway driver gets charged the same as those armed robbers who actually waved the guns."

I agree in a way. I've seen how pub fighters with minor gripes and feed themselves into an unreasonable fury if only one 'reasonable' person mentions in passing that their gripe may be justified.


It's not the crim's sense of injustice that feeds this social rage, it's the general public's (albeit muted) justifications of it.


I'm not saying that this justification is unfair either - multiple political scandals over the last decade have led the general public to distance themselves from normal social acquiesence, and they have unwittingly unleashed this turmoil upon themselves.


Incidentally, I don't think the answer is acquiesence, but I'm staggered at the actions of the public at the ballot box. They voted for more of the same.

It doesn't surprise me at all that they did.


There is a massive conceptual disconnect between our occasional tick at the ballot box and the nature of our politics.


I think this disconnect widens exponentially the farther you get from the local to the central, hence we might think we have a huge say about the residents association, some sort of say in whterh the bin men or speed humps in our ward are prioritised, and I think that noone believes they have any say about westminster, harldy surprising when party machines make the grassroots feel like that, leave alone your average relatively apolitical voter.


I've mused over how we can change this in the past but had all my proposals pooh-poohed.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Granted Shoreditch is still London, but given that the council & organisers main argument for the festival is that it is a local event, for local people (to use your metaphor), there's surprisingly little to back this up. As Blah Blah informatively points out, this is now just a commercial venture with no local connection. Our park is regarded by them as an asset that they've paid to use & abuse. There's never been any details provided of where the attendees are from, but it's still trotted out as a benefit to the local community.  There's never been any details provided of any increase in sales for local businesses, but it's still trotted out as a benefit to the local community.  There's promises of "opportunities" for local people & traders to work at the festival, but, again, no figures to back this up. And lastly, the fee for the whole thing goes 100% to running the Events dept, and the dozens of free events that no-one seems able to identify, and, yes, you guessed it - no details provided for by the council. So again, no tangible benefit for the residents of the area.
    • I mean I hold no portfolio to defend Gala,  but I suspect that is their office.  I am a company director,  my home address is also not registered with Companies House. Also guys this is Peckham not Royston Vasey.  Shoreditch is a mere 20 mins away by train, it's not an offshore bolt hole in Luxembourg.
    • While it is good that GALA have withdrawn their application for a second weekend, local people and councillors will likely have the same fight on their hands for next year's event. In reading the consultation report, I noted the Council were putting the GALA event in the same light as all the other events that use the park, like the Circus, the Fair and even the FOPR fete. ALL of those events use the common, not the park, and cause nothing like the level of noise and/or disruption of the GALA event. Even the two day Irish Festival (for those that remember that one) was never as noisy as GALA. So there is some disingenuity and hypocrisy from the Council on this, something I wll point out in my response to the report. The other point to note was that in past years branches were cut back for the fencing. Last year the council promised no trees would be cut after pushback, but they seem to now be reverting to a position of 'only in agreement with the council's arbourist'. Is this more hypocrisy from 'green' Southwark who seem to once again be ok with defacing trees for a fence that is up for just days? The people who now own GALA don't live in this area. GALA as an event began in Brockwell Park. It then lost its place there to bigger events (that pesumably could pay Lambeth Council more). One of the then company directors lived on the Rye Hill Estate next to the park and that is likely how Peckham Rye came to be the new choice for the event. That person is no longer involved. Today's GALA company is not the same as the 'We Are the Fair' company that held that first event, not the same in scope, aim or culture. And therein lies the problem. It's not a local community led enterprise, but a commercial one, underwritten by a venture capital company. The same company co-run the Rally Event each year in Southwark Park, which btw is licensed as a one day event only. That does seem to be truer to the original 'We Are the Fair' vision, but how much of that is down to GALA as opoosed to 'Bird on the Wire' (the other group organising it) is hard to say.  For local people, it's three days of not being able to open windows, As someone said above, if a resident set up a PA in their back garden and subjected the neighbours to 10 hours of hard dance music every day for three days, the Council would take action. Do not underestimate how distressing that is for many local residents, many of whom are elderly, frail, young, vulnerable. They deserve more respect than is being shown by those who think it's no big deal. And just to be clear, GALA and the council do not consider there to be a breach of db level if the level is corrected within 15 minutes of the breach. In other words, while db levels are set as part of the noise management plan, there is an acknowledgement that a breach is ok if corrected within 15 minutes. That is just not good enough. Local councillors objected to the proposed extension. 75% of those that responded to the consultation locally did not want GALA 26 to take place at all. For me personally, any goodwill that had been built up through the various consultations over recent years was erased with that application for a second weekend, and especially given that when asked if there were plans for that in post 2025 event feedback meetings (following rumours), GALA lied and said there were no plans to expand. I have come to the conclusion that all the effort to appease on some things is merely an exercise in show, to get past the council's threshold for the events licence. They couldn't give a hoot in reality for local people, and people that genuinely care about parkland, don't litter it with noisy festivals either.   
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...